Everett House, Washington DC

Designed by George Oakley Totten, Jr., the house was built in 1914 for industrialist and philanthropist Edward H.

Designed by George Oakley Totten, Jr., the house was built in 1914 for industrialist and philanthropist Edward H. Everett. The house was later used as the Turkish embassy, beginning in 1932, and became the Turkish ambassador's residence in 1999 when a new embassy building was built on Massachusetts Ave. The Everett House features a limestone facade, in Beaux-Arts neoclassic style.

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About Everett House

2525 Massachusetts Ave NW, Washington, DC 20008

Everett House and Nearby Sights on Map

President Woodrow Wilson moved here for a quiet retirement after the disastrous setbacks of his late presidency, and lived here for little over 3 years before he died (he was buried in the National Cathedral)